| Literature DB >> 33051660 |
Isaac Yen-Hao Chu1, Prima Alam1, Heidi J Larson2,3, Leesa Lin2.
Abstract
Four billion people worldwide have experienced coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) confinement. Such unprecedented extent of mobility restriction to curb the COVID-19 pandemic may have profound impacts on how individuals live, travel and retain well-being. This systematic review aims to identify (i) the social consequences of mass quarantine-community-wide movement restrictions-during previous and current infectious disease outbreaks and (ii) recommended strategies to mitigate the negative social implications of COVID-19 lockdowns. Considering social determinants of health, we conducted a systematic review by searching five databases (Ovid-MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, China National Knowledge Infrastructure and the World Health Organization COVID-19 database) for publications from inception to 9 April 2020. No limitation was set on language, location or study type. Studies that (i) contained peer-reviewed original empirical evidence and (ii) focussed on non-epidemiological implications of mass quarantine were included. We thematically synthesized and reported data due to heterogeneous disease and country context. Of 3067 publications found, 15 original peer-reviewed articles were selected for full-text extraction. Psychological distress, heightened communication inequalities, food insecurity, economic challenges, diminished access to health care, alternative delivery of education and gender-based violence were identified as negative social consequences of community-based quarantine in six infectious disease epidemics, including the current COVID-19 pandemic. In contrast, altruistic attitudes were identified as a positive consequence during previous quarantines. Diverse psychological and social consequences of mass quarantine in previous and current epidemics were evident, but individual country policies had been highly varied in how well they addressed the needs of affected individuals, especially those who are socially marginalized. Policymakers should balance the pros and cons of movement restrictions, facilitate multisectoral action to tackle social inequalities, provide clear and coherent guidance to the public and undertake time-bound policy evaluations to mitigate the negative impact of COVID-19 lockdowns and to establish preparedness strategies for future epidemics. © International Society of Travel Medicine 2020.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; Mass quarantine; epidemics; lockdown; pandemics; psychological impact; social consequences
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33051660 PMCID: PMC7649384 DOI: 10.1093/jtm/taaa192
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Travel Med ISSN: 1195-1982 Impact factor: 8.490
Figure 1Process of study selection per the PRISMA statement
Characteristics of 15 included studies in the systematic review
| Author | Country | Disease | Quarantine duration reported | Research design | Research measures | Study population | Primary outcomes | Theoretical approaches reported |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abramowitz | Liberia | EVD | 21 days | Qualitative | Focus groups and interviews | 386 community leaders | Optimal practices and innovative local strategies for EVD containment | Participatory rural appraisal models |
| Blendon | Canada | SARS | Not specified | Quantitative | Telephone surveys | 501 Canadians who experienced mass quarantine | Knowledge, attitude of and precautionary measures against SARS | Not specified |
| Cava | Canada | SARS | 9 days (Mean quarantine period) | Qualitative | Interviews | 21 residents with contact history | Experience of home quarantine | Not specified |
| Charania and Tsuji (2013) | Canada | H1N1 | NA (thought experiment) | Qualitative community-based participatory | Interviews | Nine health care informants | Effectiveness and feasibility of implementing interventions to mitigate influenza pandemic in remote and isolated First Nations communities | Community |
| DiGiovanni | Canada | SARS | Up to 10 days | Mixed methods | Focus groups, interviews and telephone-based survey | 35 residents for interview; 195 health care workers and 1509 residents for two respective surveys | Factors affecting compliance to quarantine | Not specified |
| Gostin | Multiple countries (Canada, China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam) | SARS | NA | Ethical analysis | Evidence synthesis | NA | Ethical and legal justifications on restrictions of privacy, liberty and movement in control of SARS outbreaks | Precautionary principle, least restrictive/intrusive alternative, justice and transparency |
| Hawryluck | Canada | SARS | Not specified | Quantitative | Web-based survey | 129 respondents | Psychological effects of quarantine | The Impact of Event Scale-Revised and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale |
| John | Multiple countries | COVID-19 | NA | Ethical analysis | Evidence synthesis | NA | Gender-based violence in previous and current public health emergencies | Not specified |
| Kodish | Sierra Leone | EVD | 21 days | Qualitative | Interviews | 42 informants for organizations and communities | Impact of EVD on nutrition sectors and factors for effective nutrition interventions in Sierra Leone | Not specified |
| Mihashi | China | SARS | Not specified | Quantitative | Survey | 187 respondents comprising printing company workers, university faculty members and their families and non-medical students | Predictors of psychological disorders after SARS outbreaks | An assistance model previously developed by the authors for the 1988 dysentery outbreak in the USA |
| Pellecchia | Liberia | EVD | 21 days | Qualitative | Focus groups and interviews | 462 residents of neighbourhoods diagnosed with EVD | Social implications of EVD containment with regard to communities’ perception of and response to restrictive measures | Not specified |
| Reynolds | Canada | SARS | From 7·8 to 8·7 days (Median from sub-group analysis) | Quantitative | Mailed survey | 1057 respondents | Psychological impact of quarantine (feelings, fears of developing SARS, stigmatization and symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder) | The Impact of Event Scale-Revised |
| Tracy | Canada | SARS | Not specified (assessing public attitudes toward quarantines) | Quantitative | Computer-assisted telephone interviews | 500 residents of Toronto and Regional Municipality of York | Perceptions of quarantine (justifications, sanctions, burdens and safeguards) | Harm Principle, Least Restrictive Means, Reciprocity Principle, and Transparency Principle |
| Wilken | Liberia | EVD | 21 days | Qualitative | Interviews | 115 village residents | Knowledge, attitude and practices of EVD control | Not specified |
| Zhang | China | COVID-19 | One month into the lockdown of Wuhan, China | Quantitative | Cross-sectional survey | 369 adults not epidemiologically affected by COVID-19 | Mental health conditions and life satisfaction | The 12-item Short Form Physical and Mental Health Summary Scales, the Six-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale and the Satisfaction with Life Scale |
NA: not applicable.
The details of quarantine measures among 13 of 15 selected studies
| Disease | Country | Income of economies | Year | Area affected | Number of populations affected | Quarantine measures for individuals | Type of enactment | Study included in the Review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| COVID-19 | China | UMIC | 2020 | Region | 57 million people in Hubei Province | No public transportation | Compulsory with administrative orders (police enforcement if necessary) | Zhang |
| H1N1 Influenza | Canada | HIC | 2009 | Country | 33 509 people diagnosed in Canada | Voluntarily stay at home and avoid mass gathering | Advisory | Charania and Tsuji (2013) |
| EVD | Liberia | LIC | 2014–2016 | Region | Approximately 75 000 living in West Point, Monrovia | Home-based quarantine of villagers with strict 21-day movement ban | Compulsory with law enforcement and military force | Abramowitz |
| EVD | Sierra Leone | LIC | 2014–2016 | Country | Estimated 4.5 million | A 3-day national lockdown and 21-day lockdown in high epidemic areas | Compulsory with law enforcement (jail sentence) and military force | Kodish |
| SARS | Canada | HIC | 2003 | Region | 25 000 | Home-based quarantine of close contacts of SARS patients for an average of 10 days | Advisory personal and household quarantine with maximum fines of $5000 Canadian dollars for violators | Blendon |
| SARS | China | UMIC | 2003 | City | 30178 | Close contacts were quarantined for 14 days | Compulsory with administrative orders (police enforcement if necessary) | Mihashi |
Two studies (Gostin et al. and John et al.) based on ethical scenarios are not listed.
aSee Supplementary 3 for references.
LIC: low-income country, UMIC: upper middle income country, HIC: high-income country.
Results of the quality assessment (n = 15) using MMAT and the ethics framework by Jansen and Ellerton
| Quantitative studies | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First author | Relevant sampling strategy to address research question | Representative sample of target population | Appropriate measurements | Low risk of non-response bias (≥80% response rate) | Appropriate statistical analysis to answer research question | High quality |
| Blendon | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | No | ||
| Mihashi | ✓ | ✓ | No | |||
| Reynolds | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes | |
| Tracy | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | No | ||
| Wilken | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes | |
| Zhang | ✓ | No | ||||
| Qualitative studies | ||||||
| First author | Appropriate approach to answer research question | Adequate data collection methods to address research question | Adequate findings derived from data | Interpretation of results sufficiently substantiated by data | Coherence between data sources, collection, analysis and interpretation | High quality |
| Abramowitz | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes |
| Cava (2005) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes |
| Charania and Tsuji (2013) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes |
| Kodish | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes |
| Pellecchia | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes |
| Mixed-methods studies | ||||||
| First author | Adequate rationale for using mixed-methods design | Effective integration of different components of study | Adequate interpretation of outputs of qualitative and quantitative components | Divergences/ inconsistencies between quantitative and qualitative results adequately addressed | Components of study adhere to specific tradition quality criteria | High quality |
| DiGiovanni | ✓ | No | ||||
| Hawryluck | No | |||||
| Ethics studies | ||||||
| First author | Different points conflated and adequately addressed | Key term well defined with reasonable definitions | Premises are supported with evidence followed by logical conclusions | All relevant counterarguments are addressed | Arguments or explorations of issue relevant to target practices | High quality |
| Gostin | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes |
| John | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Yes | |
aStudies satisfying at least 80% (four of five) assessment criteria are considered as high quality.
Synthesized results and recommendations on mitigating the social consequences of quarantine
| Consequences identified from 15 included studies | Themes | Examples | Recommendations from 15 included studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Psychological and mental distress | Emotional conditions | Annoyance, anxiety, boredom, disappointment, fear of infection, isolation, loneliness and mistrust | Provide both personal consultations and community psychological support to vulnerable populations |
| Symptoms of mental disorders | Post-traumatic stress disorder and depressive disorders | ||
| Stigma and discrimination | Self-isolated individuals and EVD survivors were regarded as EVD spreaders; anti-Asian racism during the SARS outbreak in Canada | ||
| Heightened communication inequalities | Public distrust of governments’ responses | Growing distrust of governments’ compulsory lockdown of slums in Liberia’s EVD outbreak | Provide comprehensive support and transparent information on quarantine |
| Misinformation on quarantine measures | Contradictory quarantine instructions from public health officials, mass media and unauthorized analysts during Canada’s SARS outbreak | ||
| Limited compliance to quarantine orders with increased risks of health | Overcrowding, poverty and lack of health care were reported as determinants of individuals’ compliance to quarantine in EVD, H1N1 and SARS outbreaks | ||
| Food insecurity | Food production and transportation | Little grain harvesting during EVD confinement in Sierra Leone; delayed food transportation due to travel restrictions for SARS containment in China | Nutritional preparedness, such as food production, access, distribution and monitoring should be planned and timely implemented |
| Food access and storage | Reduced access to food during mass quarantine against SARS in China and Canada as well as EVD in Sierra Leone and Liberia | ||
| Economic challenges | Interrupted international industries | Agricultural production, leisure business and tourism at domestic and international levels during EVD and SARS outbreaks | Provide equitable financial compensation (e.g. universal credits or extensions of business relief) to ensure the financial security of those under quarantine |
| Closure of local business entities | Shutdown of non-essential business and reduced business revenue due to decreased demands with existing costs of employment in H1N1 preparedness plans | ||
| Reduced personal incomes | Unemployment and unstable incomes for part-time or are self-employed individuals during Canada’s SARS outbreak | ||
| Diminished access to health care | Access to essential medicine and services for noncommunicable diseases | Increased number of deaths and complications from preventable health conditions during EVD outbreak in Liberia; lacked access to regular prescriptions in Canada’s SARS outbreak and China’s COVID-19 outbreak | Strengthen capacity of health care systems and equitable health care access |
| Reduced health-seeking behaviour | Drop-outs of nutrition screening and hiding treatable illnesses during EVD outbreaks in Sierra Leone and Liberia | ||
| Disruptive of education | Remote and online education | Web-based learning resources for adolescents and students during SARS outbreak in Canada | Ensure resource allocation for education innovation and platforms |
| Caregivers as educators | Community members took responsibility for children’s education during Liberia’s EVD outbreak and Canada’s H1N1 outbreak | ||
| Gender inequity and violence | Gendered home care responsibility | Women’s default role as caregivers at home during the EVD outbreak in Liberia | Establish gender-inclusive norms in national policymaking and global health governance |
| Gender-based violence | Increased numbers of women experiencing domestic violence in China and the UK during the COVID-19 pandemic |